No 6 /2019 01 Executive summary Sustaining resilience amid 04 Macroeconomic environment and slowing growth: global outlook economic and insurance 13 Insurance market outlook outlook 2020/21 24 From low to negative interest rates 32 Japanification: a global phenomenon, euro area most at risk 41 Recession scenario: what it could mean for insurers 46 Mid-end private health insurance in China: key pointers for success Executive summary Global growth will slow this and next Global growth remains weak and will slow over next two years. Last year marked the year. We are below consensus peak of the cycle, and our current forecasts for US and euro area growth of 1.6% and on the US and euro area, and expect 0.9% in 2020, respectively, are below consensus. The largest down revision is to our emerging Asia to outperform. forecasts for the euro area: the region is at risk of entering a period of low growth, low inflation and low interest rates, so-called “Japanification”. With lower levels of productivity and technical innovation, and an ageing population, the euro area will do well to weather the state of economic inertia as strongly as Japan has done since the 2000s. Overall, Asia will remain the engine of global growth, in particular its emerging economies: we forecast near 6% growth in India and China in 2020. The main threat to the growth outlook This year’s weakening growth came as trade tensions and geopolitical polarisation is a trade war. We expect global increased and, with low growth and low inflation, a U-turn in monetary policy back recession will be avoided. to easing mode. US/China trade tensions and escalation of these more broadly are the biggest risk to global growth. The risk of US recession remains elevated, but a US-led global downturn is not our baseline scenario, and the US economy remains the most resilient of the G4 nations. If there is recession, we believe it will be more moderate than that after the global financial crisis of 2008/09. We believe targeted fiscal policy and Globally, low and even negative interest rates are set to stay. We expect one more supply-side reforms are the main US interest rate cut in the first quarter of 2020. In our view, current unconventional factors to strengthen resilience in the monetary policy and negative interest rates do more harm than good, with adverse next 10 years. effects on the real economy and functioning of financial markets. The world economy has become less resilient, and with monetary policy options all but exhausted, a different policy mix is needed to build resilience in the next 10 years. Less central bank action, more supply-side reforms to lift productivity, and more fiscal stimulus for growth-enhancing areas like infrastructure and sustainable investments. Insurance continues to support Insurance is a key contributor to economic resilience, even more so when growth resilience, and we forecast 3% growth slows: when households and businesses can access financial compensation for loss in global premiums in 2020 and 2021. events, the underlying capacity of an economy to absorb shocks is enhanced. China will lead. Encouragingly, the global insurance sector continues to grow at trend. Similar to last year’s two-year view, we forecast non-life and life premiums to increase by around 3% in both 2020 and 2021. Pricing in non-life has strengthened, driven by rising loss costs in property catastrophe and US casualty, and we expect this to continue. Low interest rates will continue to pressure insurers to drive technical profitability, particularly in long-tail lines. Emerging Asia will drive global growth, in particular China, where we forecast a 9% increase in non-life and 11% in life premiums in 2020. We forecast that China will make up 60% of all additional premiums in Asia over the next 10 years. Expanding risk pools will be non-motor personal lines, and medical and health insurance for which we forecast 14% annual premium growth. The exponential growth of mid-market private medical insurance in China, with premiums up 1500% over the last two years, gives indication of the size of potential and serves as a model for resilience building in other emerging markets. If global recession were to occur, Given risk of a possible recession, in this sigma we assess how insurers would be non-life insurers would suffer. A claims impacted. With economic slowdown, demand for insurance typically falls. When disinflation impact would restrain slowdown is compounded by trade conflict, marine and trade credit insurance tend losses in some lines, but social to be hit hardest. Industry profitability would also be impacted by recession, resulting inflation is putting pressure on loss from a further drop in the yield curve, a plausible scenario in current low market yield costs in liability. levels. For the global non-life sector, we simulate that a 50 basis-point drop in the yield curve would widen the estimated existing sector margin gap of 6–9% of premiums by 1.2‒1.5%. In part offsetting this could be a claims disinflation effect. Certain lines of business like casualty tend to benefit from reduced claims severity via economic drivers (eg, wage inflation and medical expenses). Social inflation (the impact of changes in the tort system through which most liability claims are settled) on the other hand, is putting upward pressure on loss costs, most notably in US liability. However, the low interest rate environment means investment returns will remain weak, another variable that will continue to undermine profitability, and a concern for life insurers in particular. Swiss Re sigma No 6/2019 1 Key takeaways Trade war Current US/China trade tensions, and escalation of these to a more global trade war, are the biggest risk to the growth outlook. Main risk factors for the global Higher economy over one to two years October 2018 forecast Current Trade war ent ev Central bank policy error Destabilisation of the EU/Euro area China hard landing elihood of Inflation risks Lik Emerging market Aggregate contagion upside risk Lower Impact on global economic growth Higher Note: green line down to green dot indicates less risk of event materialisation (ie, improved risk scenario) today compared to October 2018; red line up to red dot indicates increased risk of event materialisation today compared to October 2018; blue dot indicates no change to risk scenario today compared to October 2018. Source: Swiss Re Institute Low and negative interest rates are here to stay More than 25% of global bonds currently trade with negative yields. Total amount (LHS) and share of 18 in USD m 45% negative yielding bonds (RHS) in 16 40% global markets 14 35% 12 30% 10 25% 8 20% 6 15% 4 10% 2 5% 0 0% 11 12 17 13 14 19 15 18 16 10 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 Global negative yielding debt (LHS) Share of all bonds outstanding (RHS) Source: Bloomberg, Swiss Re Institute 2 Swiss Re sigma No 6/2019 Profitability gap in non-life insurance In a recession scenario, falling interest rates would widen the gap, mainly due to declining investment yields. Estimated baseline profitability gap 0% as % net premiums, and additional Falling yield interest rate impact in recession –2% scenario Baseline –4% –6% –1.5% –8% –1.4% –1.7% –1.4% –1.4% –10% –1.2% –1.5% –12% US Canada UK Germany France Italy Japan Baseline Falling yield Note: to calculate the baseline profitability gap, short-term windfall gains/losses including realized gains due to declining interest rates are excluded, given that these are temporary and unsustainable. Source: Swiss Re Institute Combined ratio in US P&C The drag on profitability could be partially offset by a claims disinflation effect. The combined ratio typically improves in the years after recession. Indexed US P&C combined ratio (cat 2% adjusted) in recession scenario 0% –2% –4% –6% –8% –1 year Recession +1 year +2 years +3 years +4 years begins 1990 2007 Source: Swiss Re Institute Swiss Re sigma No 6/2019 3 Macroeconomic environment and outlook We expect global growth to slow over the next two years, amid increased uncertainty and geopolitical tensions. The number one risk to the outlook is escalation of the US-China trade war. The associated uncertainties have already hit capital spending and manufacturing output, and there is risk of spill-over into the services sector also. Our forecasts for US growth (1.6%) and for the euro area (0.9%) in 2020 are below consensus. Inflation has moderated and central banks are firmly back in easing mode: we expect one more rate cut from the Fed in the first quarter of next year. With policy rates set to stay very low for the longer term, so too will global bond yields. The global economy’s resilience to future shocks has declined and in our view, new growth recipes are needed. These include structural reforms, targeted fiscal spending (eg, on infrastructure) and sustainable investment. Economic and inflation outlook We anticipate lacklustre global growth Global growth is slowing from an already low base. The negative impact of increased this and in the coming years … uncertainty emanating from trade and geopolitical tensions, and Brexit, has hit business sentiment in manufacturing. The IMF estimates that by 2020, the US-China trade dispute – even without further escalation – will have hit global output by 0.8%, with much of the impact resulting from increased uncertainty.1 This has manifested most notably in a significant weakening in global capital spending from a 2018 peak, which bodes ill for future output.
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